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Politics : WHO IS RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT IN 2004 -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)12/19/2003 12:11:26 PM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Dean has not shown himself to be electable. That is wishful thinking cocky-poop. We need a strong centrist but someone who merely energizes the angry left wing. Once nominated, anyone can do that. Beating Bush is the key and that means taking away Bush's pro-military leadership advantage.



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)12/30/2003 2:44:31 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 10965
 
Dean Wants to Put $100B to Create Jobs

Mon Dec 29,10:54 AM ET
story.news.yahoo.com

Excerpt:

By KATHY BARKS HOFFMAN, Associated Press Writer

LANSING, Mich. - Democratic presidential candidate Howard
Dean wants to improve the nation's cities by putting
$100 billion toward creating a million jobs, increasing the federal
minimum wage to $7 an hour, and providing credit for urban businesses.

The former Vermont governor planned to unveil
his Initiative to Strengthen the Nation's Cities
during a Monday afternoon campaign stop in
downtown Detroit. In an advance copy of the
plan obtained by The Associated Press, Dean
said he would help put people back to work
by creating a $100 billion Fund to Restore
America aimed at adding at least a million
jobs in the first two years it's in place.

Cities and regions would use these funds to create jobs in education,
health care, homeland security and other critical areas. The fund also
would support local programs that help create, promote and retain good
jobs and train workers in disadvantaged communities.

Dean said he also wants to protect worker overtime pay and create a
Small Business Capital Corporation to invest $1 billion in new loans
aimed at creating 100,000 new small-business jobs in the first three
years.


His plan would set up a national fund to provide a permanent source of
funding to build, rehabilitate and preserve affordable housing for low- and
moderate-income families, and double the amount for the Community
Development Block Grant program to $10 billion.

Dean said his plan is needed because President Bush 's policies
have weakened American cities.


"Families in America's metro areas face a high cost of living," Dean says
in a news release. "If they're working hard and playing by the rules, they
shouldn't have to struggle so hard to make ends meet. That's why my
initiative is aimed at creating jobs, promoting investment in small
business, boosting wages and helping families afford housing.

"We cannot afford to waste four more years under an administration that
ignores the potential as well as the problems of our cities," he said.


___

On the Net:

deanforamerica.com

michigan4dean.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)12/30/2003 3:30:36 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 10965
 
CHALLENGING BUSH

From Patrician Roots, Dean Set Path of Prickly Independence
The New York Times
December 28, 2003

By RICK LYMAN

The Park Avenue building where Howard Dean grew up has a neurologist's
office on the ground floor and a church just behind. His mother,
Andree Maitland Dean, is eager to emphasize that the family's three-bedroom
apartment there is not luxurious.

"Look around," Mrs. Dean said in a recent interview, gesturing at the quarters
where her boys grew up. "Howard didn't have the least bit of a
glamorous upbringing."

Explaining that every time she had a baby, the dining room
would serve as a bedroom for the newborn and his nurse, she concluded,
"I don't think we could even keep up with the Bushes."

Like her son, Mrs. Dean chafes at the notion that the family
lived the kind of privileged existence that many associate with America's current first
family - despite the striking similarities between the two families that even a cursory look reveals.

George Walker Bush and Howard Brush Dean III are from opposite sides
of the nation's political fault line. Yet besides energizing the left wing of
his party, Dr. Dean has some Republicans worried that the characteristics
he shares with President Bush could appeal to swing voters, especially
when Dr. Dean's current image as a Vermont liberal is leavened
with details of the fiscally conservative way he governed Vermont for 11 years.

The two are sons of established blueblood families dominated by powerful fathers.
They attended top prep schools and Yale. And they settled far
from traditional power enclaves, reinventing themselves as archetypes
of their chosen new homes, President Bush in swaggering Texas and Dr.
Dean in outdoorsy Vermont.

They were known for hard-partying, hard-drinking in their youths,
but those days ended when they simply gave up alcohol as adults. Each man's
character was shaped by the loss of a sibling: for the president,
a sister who died of leukemia at age 3; for Dr. Dean, a younger brother who
disappeared in 1974 in Laos while on an around-the-world trip.

And although each has a distinct political style, as governors
they developed reputations for carefully bridging the political divide between liberals
and conservatives, a skill that has thus far eluded them on the national stage.

Other, deeper similarities are apparent only to those who have
spent significant time with each man: temperaments prone to irritation; political
skills that play better in small groups than on television; rock-solid confidence in their own decisions.

In addition, each man is seen as being his own worst enemy
on the campaign trail, President Bush for mangling his English and fumbling answers,
Dr. Dean for creating unnecessary crises by speaking his mind too swiftly.

Too much can be made of these similarities, of course.
Certainly Dr. Dean, 55, and his family feel it is misleading to tag them as Bushlike
bluebloods, despite the fact that they own a Park Avenue apartment
and an East Hampton country house.

"I don't hide who I am," Dr. Dean said. "I am not in the least bit embarrassed
about how I grew up. But, now, it wasn't quite as opulent as everybody
might think."

Even so, the comparison is instructive - and not only for the
likenesses it reveals. The two men's paths diverged in the fractious, culture-shaking
heart of the 1960's.

After a post-high-school year in England in 1966, Mr. Dean
shrugged off many trappings of his background, including the Republicanism that his
father preached at home. He grew his hair long, experimented
with marijuana, played guitar and harmonica, switched from khaki to denim, cut
his hair short again and emerged liberal, antiwar and resolutely Democratic.

His life also took a critical turn away from the Wall Street career that
his father had desired for him. In deciding to study medicine, he was
inspired by a zeal to help others that grew out of the political ferment
of the era and was fueled by the mysterious disappearance of his brother
Charlie in the jungles of Laos.

Hays Rockwell, a former Episcopal bishop of St. Louis who was
Mr. Dean's wrestling coach at St. George's prep school in Rhode Island, attributed
his shift toward liberalism and medicine mainly to the times, saying,
"It was just what was going on in the 60's."

Ralph Dawson, a roommate at Yale, echoed that opinion, saying:
"Howard was moving leftward and rebelling. We were all rebelling from the
straitjacket that society had us in in those days."

Dr. Dean's brother Jim senses the added influence of losing Charlie.
"We didn't talk about it," Mr. Dean said, "but I think that after that, he
understood better than I did that life is not infinite."

Two Different Images


The image that has formed of Dr. Dean since he exploded onto the
national scene last spring is of a passionate bulldog, an antiwar liberal who has
almost magically tapped into the angry heart of a Democratic Party
tired of feeling disenfranchised.

The truth is more complicated.

Dr. Dean opposed the war in Iraq, but he had otherwise
been quite supportive of President Bush's antiterrorism initiatives. And his liberal
credentials are belied by a long-standing predilection for political
moderation and fiscal conservatism in Vermont.


The image of Dr. Dean as a Park Avenue patrician is also
unlike his image in Vermont as an unpretentious,
penny-pinching homebody. But there is
little doubt that his family's wealth and position
have played a significant role in his life.

All told, for instance, Dr. Dean's parents have given him
and his family nearly $1 million in cash gifts over the last two decades, including a single
gift of $200,000 in the early 1980's. And his wife's parents gave
the couple $60,000 in 1985 to help them pay $161,700 in cash for the family's house
on Burlington's south side, freeing the couple from monthly mortgage payments.

The Deans have amassed a nest egg of about $4 million, not including
the value of their house, despite an annual income that has never exceeded
$170,000. Some of it is in land - nearly $700,000 worth, plus the Burlington
residence - but the remaining $3.24 million is in cash, bonds and a
handful of conservative stocks.

His blunt style, which has endeared him to legions of supporters
eager for a Democratic version of the Washington-bashing anti-politician who has
proved so successful for Republicans, can be misread as a lack of political sophistication.

"He's very matter-of-fact," said Peter Welch, a Vermont state senator
and longtime ally. " He's very unadorned, very quick. He's not particularly
reflective, so he comes across as less studied than he is.
But he has great political instincts, good at sizing up people and situations. Howard was
always two or three moves ahead on the chessboard."

No question, Dr. Dean's blueblood credentials are impeccable.
But even in prep school he struck classmates as unpretentious and not
materialistic. "He was not the least bit snobby," said Rick Kessler,
a scholarship student at St. George's who said he became quite attuned to the
tone of condescension from rich classmates.

Mrs. Dean sees her son's unpretentiousness as something
he learned at home, pointing out that her own parents taught her to treat people in an
egalitarian way.

"When I was growing up," she said, "we didn't even treat the servants like servants."

Her husband - also Howard B. Dean - rented their Upper East
Side apartment for $200 a month after World War II. He eventually bought it, she
said, for $9,500.

On his death in 2001, he left his widow an estate of around $7 million.

For the most part, Mrs. Dean said, her four boys - Howard, Charlie,
Jim and Bill - lived most of their childhoods in the Hamptons. The boys rode
bikes. They played with a model train set. They built elaborate underground forts.

While his parents were active in the exclusive Maidstone Club,
an East Hampton institution that for decades refused to admit blacks or Jews, the
Dean boys shunned that life. "I had plenty of friends at Maidstone,
and they were people I liked," Dr. Dean said. "But it wasn't what I wanted to do.
It wasn't that interesting."

For high school, Mr. Dean went off to St. George's, a boarding school
near Newport, R.I., affiliated with the Episcopal Church.

In the yearbook, he described himself as "a solid conservative defending
the powers of the Student Council and lashing out at cynics and
opponents." Anyone wanting to know him, he said, needed to be "the
curious type who can put up with a temper."

A Life Changing Trip


Mr. Dean's transformation from a bright, somewhat feckless son
of privilege into a goal-driven family man began, his mother believes, in the year
he spent in England after graduation from St. George's.

Dr. Dean says his mother may be right, though he remembers
the biggest change coming after he entered the politically charged atmosphere of
Yale in 1967.

His brother Jim also noticed the change after England. "His hair
was hanging down over the top of his ears," said Mr. Dean, a former marketing
executive now volunteering full time on the campaign. "He had on
those boots, you know, like the Beatles used to wear, and wire-rim glasses. He
wasn't a hippie, but it was definitely a new look and a different feel."

Of course it was a transforming experience, Dr. Dean said. He was 17,
far from home and on his own for the first time. Mr. Dean made new friends
at the Felstead School, which he attended in England, including an
emir's son from northern Nigeria. He and some other students hitchhiked
around Europe, spent Christmas break in Tunisia, slept on the floor of
the Gare du Nord in Paris and, in a particularly memorable episode, drove
overland to Turkey, passing through the Iron Curtain twice.

Mr. Rockwell, who was spending the year as a chaplain at Oxford,
had dinner one evening with Mr. Dean, who was surprised by the anti-American
sentiments he had encountered in England, especially concerning the Vietnam War.
"Nobody in Howard's life had ever said anything critical of the
United States," Mr. Rockwell said.

When he entered Yale in the fall of 1967, Dr. Dean asked to be paired
with black roommates. One of them, Mr. Dawson, was a scholarship student
from South Carolina. He says he remembers a very organized, nice guy,
but saw no hint of a budding politician. "At some point, I forget how, we
found out about his background," Mr. Dawson said. "We'd work him over a little bit about it."

Dr. Dean said there was never any discussion at home about his
having requested black roommates. "My perception was that my parents didn't
care," he said. "Yes, there was sort of this casual racism, in terms
of the racist expressions that were used by that generation. But in all, I think
my family was pretty open-minded about different kinds of people."

Years later, he remembers, his parents were immediately accepting
of his decision to marry Judith Steinberg, even though it was highly unusual
for someone from his family background to marry a Jew.

In fact, his mother said, she and his father discussed Ms. Steinberg's
heritage, but decided they really liked her and felt she would have a calming
effect on their determined but sometimes scattered son.

"We decided, well, he was never going to belong to the Maidstone Club, anyway."

Told later of his mother's comment, Dr. Dean took a moment to soak it in.
"She said that?" he finally asked, barking out a hearty laugh. "She's like
me. She says whatever comes into her head."

At Yale, social activities dominated his life, at least the first two years.

"I was a little wild," Dr. Dean said. "You know, you say things that
are inappropriate and you wish you hadn't said them. I do that enough without
drinking, so I didn't need the help."

In a 1974 letter recommending Mr. Dean for pre-med classes,
a Yale professor, Peter Brooks, tried to explain what had happened to the clearly
bright young man in his first years at the university.

"I judge that these years were for him a time of somewhat undirected
personal experimentation," Mr. Brooks wrote. "The trying out of various
commitments and ways of life with the generosity and energy that
characterize him, but without much sense of what it all meant."

After Yale, having received a medical deferment from the Vietnam
draft because of a long-standing back condition, Mr. Dean meandered and
resisted Wall Street's pull. He spent 10 months skiing and working odd
jobs in Aspen, Colo. When the spring snows melted in 1972, he returned to
New York.

"People used to follow their fathers onto Wall Street," Mrs. Dean said.
"That's the way it was done."

He began as a stockbroker's assistant and, two years later, was helping
manage a small mutual fund. "He was damn good at it," Mrs. Dean said.
"But I don't think it ever gave him any satisfaction."

Mr. Dean decided to become a doctor after working at a Denver hospital
and then volunteering in the emergency room at St. Vincent's in New York.
His disappointed father took the news well.

For one thing, Mrs. Dean said, she and her husband were amazed by
the straight A's Mr. Dean got in the classes he was taking to qualify for
medical school. He was studying, falling in love - he met Ms. Steinberg
at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, where they attended
medical school - and finding direction.

"Howard is a very solid resident, a good teacher, intellectual
in his approach, who performed well in his third year," said the doctor who evaluated
him in 1981. "His major problem continues to be one of impulsiveness."

Dr. Dean and Dr. Steinberg opened their joint practice in an old creamery
in Shelburne, which is just south of Burlington. They had two children:
Annie, who is now at Yale; and Paul, who is in his senior year of public high school.

Always a Few Steps Ahead


Still in the midst of his residency at the Medical Center Hospital
of Vermont, Dr. Dean was spotted by a local Democratic leader, Esther Sorrell,
and brought into the fringes of the party.

In 1980, he worked on Jimmy Carter's re-election campaign.
Soon afterward, he wandered into a presentation by a University of Vermont professor,
Thomas Hudspeth, about revitalizing Burlington's waterfront with a bicycle path.

"Howard came up after the presentation and said, `O.K., let's do it,' " said Rick Sharp, a lawyer.

The three men formed the Citizens Waterfront Group, to secure
a nine-mile stretch of land along Lake Champlain for the path.

"I remember Howard at the time was very good at sizing up people,"
Mr. Hudspeth said. "He'd cut to the chase, every time. He'd say, `Let's don't
bother with that guy, he's too contentious, we'll never convince him.'
Instead, we worked on some other guy. Howard was always a few steps
ahead."

Ms. Sorrell persuaded him to become the party's county chairman.
In 1983, Dr. Dean was elected to the state legislature.

Even Republicans in Vermont acknowledge that on many
issues - certainly fiscal ones - the Howard Dean of recent national fame is not the
political animal they remember from his 11 years as governor.

"Mostly, voters here saw Howard as in the center of his party,
perhaps even somewhere between his party and the Republican Party," said John
Bloomer, a Republican and the minority leader in the Vermont Senate.

Dr. Dean is sometimes portrayed as an almost accidental politician.
He did not give up his medical practice until 1991, when he became governor
upon the death of Gov. Richard Snelling. Dr. Dean had been lieutenant governor,
a part-time position he had held for nearly six years. But those
closest to him said they had detected his growing political ambition long before then.

His reputation as governor - not unlike George W. Bush's - was as a bridge
between the state's political wings. In style, though, he was quite
different from the Texas governor, who constantly preached political
tolerance and made regular genuflections to Democratic power brokers in the
legislature. Governor Dean was blunt and outspoken. He frequently
upset his top aides by lashing out at aggressive reporters or snapping at
political opponents.

The crisis that nearly cost Dr. Dean his governor's seat in 2000 - an uprising
by conservatives and independents over his signing of a law
legalizing gay civil unions - sorely tested his political skills.

"In a no-nonsense way, he made the tough decision," said Bob Rogan,
who was Dr. Dean's deputy chief of staff at the time and now a top official in
his presidential campaign. "And he didn't look back."

When conservative Democrats seemed as if they might drift into
Republican ranks, Dr. Dean set up a series of meetings with them,
dispassionately explaining his decision to sign the civil unions bill. He then let the crowd rail at him.

Then there are the questions about whether a man whose chief political
experience has been running a governor's office has the skills to run the
federal government.

"A C.E.O.'s skills are essentially the same, no matter the size
of the company," Dr. Dean said. "Clearly, with the presidency, you've also got to deal
with defense. But otherwise, the basic problems are the same and
the difference is the number of zeroes in the budget."

That may be understating the difference, even close supporters believe.

"The governor's staff was maybe five or six people, plus clerical help,
and only two or three of those are really close to you," said Dick Mazza, a
veteran Vermont senator and an ally. "You have, what, one state police
officer assigned to you? It's a lot different from being president of the
United States."

nytimes.com
Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)12/30/2003 3:49:41 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 10965
 
Democrats Criticize Bush on Beef Policy
The White House isn't doing enough to test and track cattle, candidates say. Four more states are reported to
have gotten meat from infected cow.
latimes.com

By Matea Gold and Jube Shiver Jr., Times Staff Writers

The following is an excerpt from the article

AMES, Iowa - Democratic candidates tried to turn "mad cow" disease to
political advantage Sunday, accusing the White House of lax regulatory
policies, as officials announced that meat from the cow infected with the
disease had been distributed to four more states than previously thought.

During a daylong swing through Iowa, former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean

hammered away at the "mad cow" issue, scolding the administration for not
doing enough to trace and test the nation's cattle.

"The Bush administration
had an opportunity to
avoid this situation, and
to save millions and
millions of dollars for the
beef industry in this
country," he told
reporters at his Des
Moines headquarters.

The front-runner for the
Democratic presidential
nomination urged
President Bush to back legislation that would
prevent the slaughter of ill cattle and to establish a
thorough tracking and testing system of the beef
industry.

"We don't have that tracing system because the Bush administration stubbornly refuses to look more
than a week and a half into the future in almost any policy area that they consider," Dean said.



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)1/3/2004 2:21:32 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Who's Nader Now?
The New York Times
January 2, 2004

OP-ED COLUMNIST
By PAUL KRUGMAN
story:
Message 19649328



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)1/4/2004 1:07:35 AM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Dean Now Willing to Discuss His Faith
Campaign Changed Him, Candidate Says

Message 19651326



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)1/11/2004 3:38:38 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Gore, Harkin rally Iowa crowd for Dean

Sunday, January 11, 2004 · Last updated 6:34 a.m. PT

By MIKE GLOVER
AP POLITICAL WRITER

seattlepi.nwsource.com

Excerpt:

DUBUQUE, Iowa -- Flanked by his two highest-profile
backers, Howard Dean launched another assault on
President Bush, asserting that he "doesn't understand
ordinary Americans."


Polls have shown Dean and Missouri Rep. Dick Gephardt
bunched tightly together atop the field of candidates for
Iowa's caucuses, with Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry
generally running third.

Dean hastily revamped his schedule to make a joint
appearance Saturday with former Vice President Al Gore
and Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin.

"This is an extraordinary moment for me," Dean said in a
college chapel filled to overflowing.

Both Harkin and Gore said they endorsed Dean because he
has energized the Democratic Party and brought legions of
new people into politics.

"He has found a way to inspire enthusiasm at the
grass-roots level and bring new people to the party and
that's what we need," Gore said.

Harkin said his endorsement would not be in name only,
pledging to work hard for Dean every day leading up to the
Iowa caucuses a week from Monday.

"I have basically canceled everything I was scheduled to do
for the next nine days," Harkin said.

Dean responded with a spirited assault on Bush, leaving
his Democratic rivals relatively untouched.

"This president is destroying the middle class of America,"
he said.



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)1/11/2004 6:58:55 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Doctor in the House

Driven by the net, buoyed by an army of evangelical
'Deaniacs' and powered by a fervent anti-war
message, Howard Dean's campaign could yet seize
the presidency


Paul Harris
Sunday January 11, 2004
The Observer

The following is an excerpt from the article:

Merrimack looked like any other slice of smalltown America.
Nestled among the pinewoods of New Hampshire, its white
clapperboard houses and church spire were spoiled only by the
inevitable cluster of fast food outlets.

But today Merrimack was far from ordinary. It was part of a
revolution sweeping American politics. The first clue was the
man on a street corner waving traffic towards the high school
and holding a sign proclaiming: 'The Doctor is in'. Though it was
a Saturday the car park was full. Inside the dining hall hundreds
of people had gathered to see Dr Howard Dean, the man who
has come from nowhere to lead the Democratic Party race for
the White House. The man who by next year could be the most
powerful person in the world.


It felt like a church meeting. A chorus of dignitaries sat on the
stage. The school principal, Ken Coleman, gave a speech to
prepare for Dean's entrance. 'We have seen terrible things
happening in America,' he warned. 'We either nominate Howard
Dean or we have four more years of George Bush.'


Dean bounded up and was greeted as a saviour. The crowd -
housewives, pro fessionals, grandparents with toddlers hauled
along for the ride - stood and applauded. Stocky and red-faced,
Dean looked an unlikely hero, but he is getting used to this sort
of attention. 'We're going to have a little fun at the President's
expense,' he promised with a smile. First target was the
economy. He cited figures showing a boom in productivity and
asked rhetorically: 'Anyone got their jobs back?' His delivery
was well-paced, mixing rehearsed points with ad libs. 'We can
do better than this,' he insisted.

When it was over the crowd surged forward.
Dean disappeared
among the autograph hunters. Eventually he was hustled out of
the door, leaving a happy crowd and exasperated reporters, one
of whom had been physically prevented from asking Dean any
questions. 'It is amazing how quickly "frontrunner-itis" sets in,'
lamented Howard Kurtz of the Washington Post. 'I remember
him a year back when he would have been desperate for the
attention.'

But a year is a long time in politics ... particularly American
politics. There is nothing else like the New Hampshire primary in
Western democracy. It is raw politics, where those seeking to
become President of America must first win the backing of the
citizens of this tiny New England state. And this time things in
the 'Granite State' are different. The Democrats are angry,
angrier than at any time since Richard Nixon - perhaps even the
Great Depression. Bush, with his post-11 September agenda,
has divided America and also the Democratic Party. The
atmosphere on the streets and in the town halls of New
Hampshire is of political combat at its most vicious.


That may well set the tone for the national election to come - but
first New Hampshire must be won. Its importance stems from
the byzantine way America selects presidential candidates. For
Republican George W. Bush - running unopposed - there is no
problem. But the Democrats must whittle down a field of nine
hopefuls. This is done with state-by-state elections by party
members. Though Iowa now votes first, New Hampshire is still
seen as the proving ground. This wooded, mountainous state of
just 1.2 million people punches far above its weight. At stake are
the fabled three 'M's: momentum, media and money. Those who
triumph here expect to reap all three and sweep the country to
secure the nomination.

This field is larger than usual. There is the retired general,
Wesley Clark; the firebrand preacher Al Sharpton, and former
ambassador Carol Moseley Braun - the first black woman to
ever run for President; there are also Democrat warhorses like
senators Dick Gephardt, Joe Lieberman and John Kerry; and the
Clintonesque John Edwards, a Southern charmer. Finally,
there's Dennis Kucinich, an avowed radical. It's a colourful bunch
and each is treading the same worn path as every President
before them: the path through New Hampshire.

It is house-to-house political warfare. Candidates set up camp in
the state. Local politicians, normally passed over by
Washington bigwigs, suddenly find themselves courted by all
nine of the runners. Politicians, who a year from now might live
in the White House, are forced to confront real people. 'We get
to look them in the eye and they can't duck tough questions.
Madison Avenue can't get you elected in New Hampshire,' said
local Democrat activist Paul Needham. He should know, having
met every serving President since 1976. 'It's easy. I just live in
New Hampshire and have a pulse,' he said.

The media have dubbed Dean's supporters the 'Deaniacs'. They
are young idealists who have turned the campaign into a
phenomenon. They work hard, play hard, sleep on each other's
floors and have the time of their lives. They also get a whiff of
power and valuable CV points. Days start at 8.30am and finish
near midnight. They bubble over with enthusiasm at morning
meetings.

Driving to a college town in a car full of Deaniacs is a lesson in
what it is to be young and enthusiastic. Chad Bolduc, 22, and
Emily Barson, 23, shout their dedication above the music blaring
from the radio as they scout a location for an upcoming debate.
Dean has inspired them to take time off from - or give up - their
studies. Bolduc once acted as Dean's driver for a day of
campaigning. It left him breathless. 'I could see he is such a
good guy. He is not bullshitting us at all,' he said. Bolduc does
not think his college will let him come back due to the time he
has spent working for Dean. But he does not care. There will
always be another college, but not another campaign like this.

Another big difference in Dean's campaign lies in cyberspace.
He has mobilised the internet in a way all his rivals have tried
and failed to copy. He raises huge sums from online donations.
Across the country 'meet-ups' have been organised over the
internet, putting together an unprecedented national network of
young, professional activists. When Bush's campaign raises a
million dollars at a fundraiser, Dean's activists rally over the
internet to match it. They usually succeed. Staffers and
supporters swap ideas using online journals or blogs.

This is the future. For a look at the past, one need go no further
than the faltering Joe Lieberman.
He should have been a
frontrunner. He was Al Gore's running mate in 2000 and is a
moderate who would appeal to the middle ground. But this is not
a year for moderation. Even Gore has plumped for Dean.

Lieberman looks old-fashioned now. Ham-fisted slogans like 'A
Joe-vember to remember' and 'Liebermania' have fallen flat. At a
diner in the northern town of Littleton, Lieberman's problems
were plain to see. It was 8.30 am and the three customers were
outnumbered by the press. But Lieberman sat down and chatted
with them anyway, looking like any other customer - aside from
the three secret service agents hovering nearby. At one point he
noticed a motivational note posted on the kitchen wall. 'Act as if
it is impossible to fail,' he read out loud. But it seemed a bit late
for that.

This is a war election.
It is there in the yellow ribbons tied to
trees and the American flags hung from freeway overpasses. It
is also there on the TV news each night in reports of the dead
and maimed GIs in Iraq. It is the issue that divides the country,
and the issue that gave birth to the Howard Dean phenomenon.

Dean's opposition to the war, initially seen as a handicap, has
now turned into his strength. He used it to gain support but also
to attack his Democrat rivals. At every meeting Dean speaks out
against the war. But just as the war helped make him, it can
destroy him too, exposing him on the issue of national security -
the Democrats' traditional Achilles heel. The capture last month
of Saddam Hussein took some of the wind out of Dean's sails,
but he held firm, arguing that capturing Saddam would not make
America safer from terrorists. If the American body count
continues to rise then Saddam emerging from his spider-hole
will rapidly become just a memory.


…………………..

If Dean becomes President, America could be rebuilt in the style
of the good doctor's Vermont.
But to those eager to portray
Dean as a wild-eyed liberal (in a country where liberal is a dirty
word) Dean's record in Vermont comes as a surprise. He
governed as a fiscal conservative, angering the left-wing of his
state Democratic party. He insisted on a balanced budget and
set up a 'rainy day' fund for the state's surplus. Although he
signed into law gay 'civil unions' giving homosexual partners the
same legal status as married couples, he only did so after a
court decision recommending it.
He dislikes gun control
(Vermont is a hunting state), and has even won plaudits from the
National Rifle Association. He promises action on environmental
issues but knows he will never end America's love affair with the
car. 'I have seen the car park. It is full of SUVs,' he tells each
audience he speaks too. 'We have SUVs in Vermont too.
Nobody's going to throw Americans out of their SUVs.'

So who is this country doctor shaking America's political
firmament? He is not from Vermont at all. Dean's rush-released
autobiography begins with the words, 'My family comes from
Sag Harbor', referring to a sleepy Long Island resort town. But,
in fact, Dean is a New Yorker. And a rich one, too. He grew up
the son of a stockbroker on Park Avenue. He went to school at
the ultra-posh Downing School on East 62nd Street. Sag
Harbor, which Dean eulogises as a childhood place of
swimming, fishing and stealing potatoes, was just a holiday
destination.

The family was traditional. His father, also Howard Dean, was
known in the family as 'Big Howard'. He was an avid Republican.
The younger Dean, 'Little Howard', stood out. He asked to be
roomed with black students while at Yale. Big Howard refused to
let his son's new friends visit the family home. Everything about
Dean's background should have produced another stockbroker
or a lawyer. Instead Dean chose to become a doctor. After
graduation from medical school he moved to Vermont to set up
home with his wife, Judith Steinberg, a Jewish medic. He moved
into politics (his first political act was campaigning for Jimmy
Carter) and rose to be deputy governor before the sudden death
of his boss called him to the top job in the state.

The Deans are a private couple. When Dean was Vermont's
governor his wife rarely attended state functions. She does not
campaign for him. Their teenage son Paul had a recent run-in
with police over the theft of alcohol from a country club. Dean
refused to answer questions on the matter. Now it appears that
the pressure of campaign ing is already changing things. Last
week Dean said his wife was preparing to do some television
interviews and might appear in a campaign advert.

At heart, Dean is still a country doctor. He is a mix of small 'c'
conservatism and DIY liberalism. When he was deputy governor
he still ran his doctor's practice. His wife plans to open a
practice in Washington if he wins the White House. Dean can
only be understood through the prism of his profession. The
campaign trail is already littered with Dean the Doctor stories;

aides treated at the roadside after minor accidents; Dean
stopping everything to administer a quick check-up. Yet he
plays the game of politics hard. Addressing one meeting on
what he thought of Bush's record in office, he gave a simple
diagnosis. The American public, he said, was being 'shafted'.

Dean tells the story of sitting at his desk, reading a newspaper
full of bad news, and suddenly asking himself if he was just
going to complain... or do something about it. The answer led to
a presidential campaign that began far below the radar of
national politics. Slipping over the Vermont border, Dean
addressed tiny gatherings. He worked the local media. His
stroke of genius was hiring Joe Trippi, a former Silicon Valley
mogul, as his campaign manager. That ensured the exploitation
of cyberspace. And then there was his passion, which seeped
through whatever medium he used. By the time Dean burst on to
the national scene last summer, with more cash than any of his
rivals, he was already old news to the legions of tech-savvy
supporters who had been following him on the internet. It was a
classic combination of new and old, of pounding the streets
while working the inboxes.

In any US election there is one simple rule: money wins.
Against all odds, Dean now has the money. His campaign has
raked in at least $25m, more than any other. Now,
controversially, Dean has foregone capped state funding in the
hope of being able to raise more alone. That sabotaged years of
Democrat efforts to take the cash out of politics, but Dean's
supporters argue that when you are facing Bush - who also
waives state funding - you have no choice.

Dean spends his cash, too. For all the hype over his grassroots
campaign, the airwaves are full of Dean adverts. But he is not
the only one with money. Others have the means to fight on,
hoping that Dean slips up as an increasingly prying media casts
a spotlight over every aspect of his background.

…………

No matter how slick other candidates are, though, none can
match the fervour of Dean's campaign. This is nowhere more
visible than in the most intimate of New Hampshire traditions:
the house party.
This is when candidates hold court in a
supporter's front room. Polly and Edward Schumaker live in the
village of Bow, deep in the woods. It was lunchtime, with the
smell of freshly cooked muffins wafting, and 150 people
crammed inside the house. 'Is this the first time you've heard
him speak?' Nora Sanders, a medical student, asked a group of
girls. They nodded. 'He's amazing,' Sanders assured them.


When Dean arrived, he inched his way through the crowd, taking
five minutes to negotiate a 15-foot passageway. He stood on a
box in the middle of the dining room and, diverting from his
script, asked who had seen him speak before. Half put up their
hands. Dean grinned: 'It's like going to a Grateful Dead concert.
Some new songs are OK, but if I don't do a few of the old
favourites you people will be cross.'

He segued effortlessly into his usual monologue. His voice rose
in anger to make a point, triggering applause, before falling back
again. The audience nodded and clapped, responding to
questions and prompts like a congregation to their priest. Even
some journalists, caught up in the atmosphere, found
themselves clapping at the end.

(continued)



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)1/12/2004 10:19:37 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 10965
 

Howard Dean giving the 'devil' his due


Monday, January 12, 2004 Posted: 3:07 PM EST (2007 GMT)


WASHINGTON (Creators Syndicate) -- "E pluribus duo" is the catchy
formulation coined by Professor John Kenneth White of Catholic
University to describe the United States' much-reported political
polarization of 2004 into two competing camps.

Independent pollster John Zogby offers this analysis: "We
are split as a nation.. .. We need to understand we are
structurally, culturally, ideologically divided." Then, Zogby
adds that earlier third party presidential challengers
"George Wallace and Ralph Nader are wrong; there is -- in
most voters' view -- a dime's worth of difference" between
the country's two major parties.

Because he first grasped this defining reality of the
contemporary American mood, former Vermont Gov.
Howard Dean captured the imagination and much of the
support of Democrats and other Americans who were a lot
more indignant than was the candidate they backed.

Why this anger?
How about the news that the Bush
administration has quietly withdrawn a 400-strong
military team it had confidently dispatched to Baghdad to
uncover Iraq's WMD (weapons of mass destruction)? Or
maybe the respected Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace's report charging that "administration
officials systematically misrepresented the threat from
Iraq's WMD and ballistic missile programs" and "there was
no evidence to support the claim that Iraq would have
transferred WMD to Al Qaeda and much evidence to
counter it" got a few folks hot under the collar.


Without real threats to justify last March's invasion of
Iraq, then the Bush policy turns out to be -- at the
tragically painful price of 3,000 serious American
casualties -- the removal of Saddam Hussein from power.
Was that the deal?

Does it tick you off that while the United States spends
more on health care than any other nation, we expand
our worldwide lead in the number of our citizens who are
uninsured -- 43 million of our neighbors?

Does it get either your Irish up that the administration
brags about an economy where nearly 9 million of our
brothers and sisters who spent today looking for work will
not have a job to go to tomorrow,
as they did not have a
job to go to yesterday, and that nearly 5 million
Americans who want to work full-time are limited to
part-time jobs?

In the thoughtful judgment of one household-name
Democrat who is supporting an opponent of the Vermont
maverick, "Dean has tapped into emotionally where
Americans are; he expresses their revulsion with the way
things are,
and he is obviously willing to take on the
establishment -- both the economic establishment and
the Washington establishment." What has worked well for
Dean, according to this party wise-man, is "the belief
among voters that 'what you see is what you get.'"

But isn't Howard Dean too angry? This tactic is right out
of the 2000 Republican playbook.
Remember GOP
maverick Arizona Sen. John McCain, who threatened the
best laid plans of party leaders to install as the nominee
the Texas governor?

McCain, we were told repeatedly, did not have the
appropriate presidential temperament: He has a bad
temper; he was too angry.
Funny, I recall no videotape of
McCain tantrums. Yes, Dean who has been taking some
tough shots from his primary opponents, showed an
unappealing impulse to "tell teacher" when he publicly
criticized the Democratic Party chair for failing to
intervene to tell the others to go easy.

His mention on a radio broadcast of a baseless charge that
George W. Bush had foreknowledge of the Sept. 11
attacks was both offensive and irresponsible, not unlike
President Ronald Reagan's smear during the 1988
campaign of Democrat Michael Dukakis' mental and
emotional stability.

But Dean deserves great credit for convincing more than
300,000 Americans of ordinary income and influence that
their votes, their voices and their contributions can
compete with those of the rich and well-connected.

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, George W.
Bush has raised 73 percent of his $130 million war chest
through maximum individual contributions of $2,000
each. By stark contrast, nearly three-fifths of Dean's
record (Democratic) total has come in contributions of less
than $200, and only 13 percent of the Dean total has
been from $2,000 donors. Bush has raised barely
one-tenth of his campaign riches in gifts of less that $200.

Howard Dean may not be the Happy Warrior, but for
many Americans -- including most Democrats -- January
2004 is not to be confused with Morning in America.
British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli once observed
that the two indispensable prerequisites for successful
leadership are that the leader know and understand
himself, and know and understand the times in which he
lives.

Howard Dean, better than any of his opponents, has
understood the times up to now. That is why he leads.

cnn.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)1/13/2004 4:34:30 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Dean Goes on Offensive in Iowa
Democrat 'Tired of Being a Pincushion'

washingtonpost.com

By John F. Harris and Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, January 13, 2004; Page A01

The following is an exerpt from the article:

PELLA, Iowa, Jan. 12 -" Former Vermont governor Howard Dean
opened the final week of campaigning before next week's crucial
Iowa caucuses with a sharp attack on his leading rivals Monday,
charging that they are part of a Washington establishment that
failed to hold President Bush to account and that they cannot
bring change to the capital or the country.


The campaign in Iowa remains extremely
fluid, with many undecided voters. Dean's
decision to push back against his
opponents underscored concerns among
his advisers and supporters that he has
spent too much time on the defensive in
recent weeks and that he has sometimes
appeared rattled by rivals' attacks and
lackluster in debate.

Dean's advisers have worried for some time
about how other candidates can gang up
on him. On Monday, Dean explained his
new, more aggressive posture by saying,
"I'm tired of being a pincushion here."

Seeking to recapture the mantle of the
anti-establishment outsider and to stoke
the enthusiasm of a grass-roots movement
he is counting on to deliver him a victory
next Monday and elsewhere, Dean struck
back.

"We need real change, and we don't just
need a change in presidents," Dean said at
a pancake breakfast here Monday
morning. "We need a change in
Washington, and we're not going to get it
by electing someone from Washington."

Although he has been declared the
Democratic front-runner and holds a strong lead in New
Hampshire, Dean is in a tight race in Iowa. With polls showing
him roughly even with Rep. Richard A. Gephardt (Mo.), and with
Sens. John F. Kerry (Mass.) and John Edwards (N.C.) behind
them, each hopes to spring a surprise next week.

A loss by Dean could change the dynamic of the Democratic
race, and far from embracing a front-runner's strategy of soaring
above the fray, Dean mentioned all his main rivals by name.

Dean said that "Washington politicians and the established press
. . . have attacked us for months." He added that although his
rivals "want to say they are against the establishment, they are
the establishment."

He dismissed them all as politicians who stand for the
"Washington establishment," and he repeatedly reminded voters
that, with the exception of Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich (Ohio), the
other elected Democrats in the race supported the resolution
authorizing Bush to go to war with Iraq."



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)1/15/2004 4:46:18 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Braun Quits Presidential Race,
Backs Dean


story.news.yahoo.com

By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer

CARROLL, Iowa - "Former Illinois Sen. Carol Moseley Braun quit the Democratic presidential race Thursday and endorsed
Howard Dean as the best choice to "renew our
country and restore our privacy, our liberty and our economic security."

"Gov. Dean has the energy to inspire the
American people, to break the cocoon of fear
that envelopes us and empowers President
Bush and his entourage
from the extreme right-wing," she said at a
joint appearance with the former Vermont
governor."



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)1/24/2004 4:15:22 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 10965
 
Dean Alleges Dirty Attacks in Iowa

story.news.yahoo.com

By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer

DOVER, N.H. - Howard Dean said Saturday the
was surprised by the "under the table" campaigning he faced during the
Iowa caucus and said the state needs to prevent such negative attacks if
it wants to keep the nation's leadoff presidential vote.

Dean said his rivals "had their folks really
beating up on the people who went in, trying
to get them to change their minds in
caucus."

"I think Iowa is going to have to change the
way it conducts its caucuses if it wants to
continue to be first," he told reporters in an
interview on his campaign bus in New
Hampshire.

Democratic National Committee (news -
web sites) rules prohibit any state from
holding a nominating caucus before Iowa's
caucus and New Hampshire's primary.
Officials from other states have protested
that the two state have such a
disproportionate influence on the
presidential election. But Iowa and New
Hampshire are fiercely protective of their
special status.

Dean came in a distant third in Iowa behind
Sens. John Kerry (news - web sites) of
Massachusetts and John Edwards (news -
web sites) of North Carolina. He's looking for
a win in New Hampshire to help recover from
the disappointing showing.

Dean has blamed his Iowa loss on negative
attacks that he suffered as a one-time
front-runner in the race.
He said Saturday
that he would not start attacking Kerry in an
effort to bring him down.

But he did point out that he and Kerry had
taken different positions on both wars
against Iraq . Dean
supported the invasion under the first
President Bush while
Kerry voted against it. Dean opposed the
invasion of Iraq last year while Kerry voted
for the resolution authorizing the U.S.-led
war.

"Here is a gentleman who's running, who
votes no in 1991 when there are troops in Kuwait and the oil fields are on
fire, and then votes yes and there turns out not to be a threat," Dean
said. "I would be deeply concerned about that kind of judgment in the
White House. His voting record on Iraq is exactly the opposite of mine,
and I think my position has proven to be right twice."


Asked Saturday for specifics about the negative attacks, Dean pointed
to a book distributed by North Carolina Sen. John Edwards' campaign
that instructed supporters how to attack other candidates during the
caucuses. For example, it told campaign captains in Iowa to describe
Dean as an "elitist from Park Avenue in New York City."


"I never dreamed that would happen," Dean said. "And I don't think that's
a healthy thing for democracy. It's enough to have it go on for weeks and
weeks in the press, but when it goes on inside the caucus, I don't think
that's good," he said.

Edwards, who has credited his strong second-place showing in Iowa to
campaigning on a positive message, said he did not know about the
book until this week. He said he took full responsibility for it and
instructed his campaign never to let it happen again.

Dean came in a distant third in Iowa, while Sen. John Kerry of
Massachusetts won the state. Dean said the negative tactics are "a real
problem for Iowa."

"I mean, I like the Iowa caucuses a lot and I think they should be first,
but they've got to have a process that's good for democracy," he said.
"And the kind of stuff that's gone on - you know on the phone calls and
all that stuff under the table - is not particularly good for democracy."

After Dean's remarks, his spokesman, Doug Thornell, clarified that Dean
would protect Iowa's right to have the nation's first caucus.

"Governor Dean loves Iowa and when elected president, he will ensure
that Iowa retains its status as first in the nation," Thornell said.

Meanwhile, Dean has cut back his television advertising in states with
Feb. 3 contests to concentrate his spending on New Hampshire. He is
pouring in about $500,000 through Tuesday's primary and his ads in New
Mexico ended Wednesday. Commercials in South Carolina and Arizona
will stop running this weekend.

"Things are closing fast," he said Saturday in Somersworth, N.H. "We
can win this. What we are seeing in the last few days is that people who
went away from us after we lost Iowa are coming back."

"There are a lot of people who are going from other
candidates into the undecided column," Dean told a
rally of volunteers.

Jay Carson, a Dean spokesman, said the campaign has
not yet decided how many days it will be in the dark in
New Mexico, Arizona and South Carolina.

"We're assessing that right now. We still have strong
organizations in all of those places," he said. "But we're
focusing on New Hampshire right now in terms of our
advertising."



To: Mephisto who wrote (7856)2/12/2004 6:58:57 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 10965
 

John Nichols: Report agrees media unfair to
Dean

madison.com
Full story:
Message 19801864